This appeal presents an issue of first impression in this circuit. Believing, as we do, that a straightforward application of the hoary doctrine of res judicata is dis-positive of the question raised, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of plaintiff’s civil action.
I. BACKGROUND
At all times material hereto, plaintiff-appellant Carl Kale has been a citizen and resident of Massachusetts. He was formerly employed by defendant-appellee Combined Insurance Company of America (Coinco), a “citizen” of Illinois. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(c) (specifying method of determining corporation’s citizenship for purposes of diversity jurisdiction). In May 1983, after some two decades with Coinco and its predecessor in interest, appellant was cashiered.
Seeking vindication, Kale filed suit in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. He pled federal question jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1331, and alleged that his firing violated the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634. He adorned his ADEA complaint with pendent state-law claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress and breach of an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing (predicated upon Coinco’s alleged failure to abide by promises made in its personnel manual). The case was assigned to Judge Skinner. The state-law claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress was voluntarily discontinued at a relatively early date. Later on, Judge Skinner granted summary judgment, finding the federal statutory claim to be time-barred.
Inasmuch as Kale’s complaint to all intents and purposes asserted only federal question jurisdiction,
1
rejection of the ADEA count seemingly ended the federal court’s interest in the matter; at any rate, Judge Skinner dismissed the appended state-law claim at that juncture, writing: “Since I have disposed of plaintiff’s lone federal claim, I now dismiss without prejudice [the remaining] state cause of action over which there was only pendent jurisdiction.” Appellant — who does not dispute that he knew at the time that diversity of citizenship existed — did not alert the court
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to, or make any effort to assert the presence of, diversity jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a). By the same token, he neither sought reconsideration of, nor appealed, the dismissal of his state-law claim. He did appeal the entry of summary judgment on the ADEA claim. He lost.
See Kale v. Combined Ins. Co.,
The waters did not remain placid for long. In May 1989, Kale filed a new suit in a Massachusetts state court, alleging a tsunami of state-law claims, e.g., breach of contract (based on the personnel manual), promissory estoppel, tortious breach of the implied good faith/fair dealing covenant. Diversity jurisdiction being apparent from the face of the record, Coinco removed the case to the federal district court.
See
28 U.S.C. §§ 1332(a), 1441. It then moved to dismiss the action based on the preclusive effect of
Kale I.
The district court (Tauro, U.S.D.J.) granted the motion, ruling that the failure to bring the state-law claims under diversity jurisdiction in
Kale I
barred the assertion of those claims in another, later proceeding.
See Kale v. Combined Ins. Co.,
II. QUESTION PRESENTED
In framing the issue on appeal, we think it useful to begin by cataloguing what is not legitimately at issue.
1. There is no dispute that the plaintiff could have established diversity jurisdiction in
Kale I,
but failed properly to plead it.
See Kale II,
2. Kale has never contended that his claims, or any of them, were so lacking in value as to fall below the “amount in controversy” requirement for diversity jurisdiction, see 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a).
3. It is beyond peradventure that the dismissal of a claim as time-barred constitutes a judgment on the merits, entitled to preclusive effect.
See, e.g., Rose v. Town of Harwich,
4. The parties agree that, given the contours of the
Kale I
record, Judge Skinner had every right to dismiss the state-law claim without prejudice once the federal cause of action was resolved on the merits.
See United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
5. It is also uncontested that the implied contract claim in
Kale II
was pleaded and dismissed in
Kale I.
While the parties do dispute whether the other state-law claims pleaded in
Kale II
were “brought” in
Kale 1,
we need not enter that debate. The judgment in
Kale I
was rendered by a federal court acting under its federal question jurisdiction. Hence, the availability of a
res judicata
defense in this case depends on the federal-law standard.
See, e.g., Cemer,
6. Whatever the relationship between the state-law claims asserted, variously, in the two complaints, it is beyond cavil that, at the very least, the claims pleaded in Kale II could all have been joined in Kale’s original complaint. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(e)(2) (a plaintiff may set forth multiple statements of claim in a single complaint); Fed. R.Civ.P. 18(a) (a party may join in a single action “as many claims ... as the party has against an opposing party”).
Having tapered the lens of inquiry, it can be seen that this appeal, stripped to bare essentials, presents the following question: when a state-law claim, originally brought pendent to a federal claim, is dismissed without prejudice for want of subject matter jurisdiction following rejection of the joined federal claim on the merits, under circumstances where the plaintiff could have asserted an alternative jurisdictional basis but did not, and the plaintiff thereafter brings a new suit against the same defendant which includes the pendent state-law claim as well as other state-law claims which could have been pleaded in the initial suit; quaere: are the state-law claims in the second suit precluded by the original adjudication? Put another way, should the judgment in Kale I be accorded preclusive effect with respect to the claims asserted in Kale II, inasmuch as those claims could have been prosecuted in Kale I had the plaintiff elected to plead an available alternative basis for jurisdiction? 3
III. ANSWERING THE QUESTION
We answer the question presented in the affirmative, holding that when a plaintiff pleads a claim in federal court, he must, to avoid the onus of claim-splitting, bring all related state claims in the same lawsuit so long as any suitable basis for subject matter jurisdiction exists. We reach this conclusion without special deference to the decision below. The case was decided on a motion to dismiss brought under Civil Rule 12(b)(6) and appellate courts ordinarily review such rulings
de novo. See Gonzalez-Bernal v. United States,
A.
We start our analysis with some abecedarian truths. Under a federal-law standard, the essential elements of claim preclusion are (1) a final judgment on the merits in an earlier action; (2) an identity of the cause of action in both the earlier and later suits; and (3) an identity of parties or privies in the two suits.
See In re Air Crash at Dallas/Fort Worth Airport,
Concededly, the phrase “identity of cause of action” is more easily stated than defined.
See Harper Plastics, Inc. v. Amoco Chemicals Corp.,
In light of the foregoing, it necessarily follows that a particular legal theory not pressed in the original suit will nonetheless be precluded in the subsequent one if it prescinds from the same set of operative facts.
See, e.g., Cemer,
We turn from the general to the specific. It is nose-on-the-face plain that the claims in
Kale II
stemmed from the same transactional hub as the claims previously mounted in
Kale I.
Though dressed in somewhat different garb, the claims all sought recovery in consequence of the same occurrence: defendant’s unilateral termination of the plaintiff’s employment. The differences were differences in the theories of liability and the selection of remedies, not differences in the fundamental cause of action. As the district court found, there was an identity of cause of action.
See Kale II,
It appears, then, that all the elements of classic claim preclusion are present in this situation. Unless res judicata is to be robbed of its doctrinal significance, appellant had an obligation to cluster his theories of recovery in Kale I, by whatever necessary jurisdictional means, or else forever hold his peace.
B.
Existing precedent, though scanty, supports such a preclusionary result. The only case directly in point—and it could hardly be more so—is
Shaver v. F.W. Woolworth Co.,
The district court in the second Shaver case granted summary judgment on grounds independent of res judicata. The Seventh Circuit, however, went directly for the jugular, holding squarely that:
Because Shaver neglected to assert the existence of diversity jurisdiction in his prior action in order to pursue his breach of contract claims, both the strict test of and the policy behind the res judicata doctrine bars the present action.
Shaver,
Appellant does not dispute that
Shaver
is on all fours with his case. Rather, he claims it was wrongly decided. We do not agree. In our view, the reasoning of the
Shaver
majority,
Appellant also essays an end run around Shaver, arguing that, even if Shaver is good law, he could not reasonably have been expected to anticipate the holding. 5 Whatever the merits of the Seventh Circuit’s opinion, appellant’s thesis runs, a grave injustice would result from “retroactively” foisting the Shaver rule upon him. The plea holds little water. While the circumstances of Kale’s case are admittedly unusual, the doctrine governing its resolution is quite mature and unencumbered by contradictions or ambiguities in respect to the question at hand. Rather than emanating from some dark interstice of the law, the district court’s holding in Kale II was entirely predictable. So, too, was the outcome in Shaver. There is no unfairness, under all the circumstances, in declining to extricate the plaintiff from a self-dug hole.
C.
Appellant is not short of fall-back positions. He contends that, even if the rule is as we envision it, his case is outside the rule because Judge Skinner dismissed the state-law claim in
Kale I
“without prejudice.” This contention represents an unvarnished attempt to squeeze an elephant's foot into a pony’s shoe. To be sure, claim preclusion can be avoided where “[t]he court in the first action has expressly reserved the plaintiff’s right to maintain the second action.” Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 26(1)(b) (1982). But, the exception does not pertain here. Judge Skinner’s use of the phrase “without prejudice” was supererogatory, because the dismissal of pendent claims on jurisdictional grounds is always without prejudice.
See
Fed.R. Civ.P. 41(b);
see also United Mine Workers,
D.
Appellant’s next initiative hawks a further exception to claim preclusion. In general, the rule requiring all claims arising from a single cause of action to be asserted in a single lawsuit will not apply if the plaintiff was unable to assert a particular claim or theory in the original case “because of the limitations on the subject matter jurisdiction of the courts.” Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 26(l)(c) (1982). This jurisdictional competence exception permits the maintenance in a second suit of a claim stemming from the
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cause of action previously sued upon “if a jurisdictional obstacle has precluded raising that issue in the first action.”
Pasterczyk v. Fair,
For the jurisdictional competence exception to flower, it must be shown that the claim pressed in the second suit could not have been asserted and resolved in the first suit by reason of limitations on the first court’s jurisdiction. This determination must be made by the second court, giving preclusive effect to any jurisdictional determinations made by the first court (so long as the requirements of collateral estoppel, i.e., issue preclusion, have been met). 6 Accordingly, when Kale II arose, it was up to Judge Tauro to determine whether the nonfederal claims could have been litigated in Kale I if the plaintiff had chosen to engage the district court’s diversity jurisdiction, and if so, the legal effect of that fact.
Judge Tauro’s response was patently correct on all scores. The existence of an alternate hook on which federal court jurisdiction could have been hung, permitting state-law claims to be freely litigated in a federal forum, rendered the competency exception inapplicable. After all, for it to pertain, the jurisdictional obstacle to joinder of all claims must be attributable to limitations on the first court’s power to hear and decide a claim rather than to a party’s contrivance.
E.
There is one last arrow in appellant’s quiver. He importunes that, regardless of ordinary rules of
res judicata,
the equities demand that his current suit be given free passage. This entreaty overlooks, however, that the doctrine of
res judicata
is no “mere matter of practice or procedure,” but “a rule of fundamental and substantial justice, of public policy and of private peace, which should be cordially regarded and enforced by the courts.”
Federated Dept. Stores, Inc. v. Moitie, 452
U.S. 394, 401,
We see no injustice in applying time-honored principles of claim preclusion in such a situation. Whenever a litigant decides to enter the court system to seek justice, he must play by the rules. Any idiosyncratic unfairness that may result from the consistent and straightforward application of preclusion principles is, we think, far outweighed by the systemic benefits which flow from steadfast adherence to so salutary a doctrine.
See Moitie,
[I]f courts relaxed the principles of claim preclusion every time it appeared that a litigant had a strong claim ‘on the equities,’ the doctrine would fail to serve its purposes of promoting judicial economy and repose. In some individual instances a fairer result might be achieved, but more often the litigation of stale claims and the resulting uncertainty would mean injustice or hardship.
*1169 IV. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. Appellant’s failure to assert diversity jurisdiction when it unarguably existed, and he knew as much, gave the judgment in Kale I wide-ranging preclusive effect. Kale II, therefore, exemplified the classic claim preclusion paradigm. Because of this, and because the case did not fall within an exception to the normal rules of res judicata, Judge Tau-ro’s dismissal order was wholly appropriate.
Affirmed.
ORDER OF COURT
The petition for rehearing en banc filed by plaintiff-appellant Carl Kale is, under this court’s internal operating procedures, considered both by the panel and by the full court. Panel rehearing is hereby denied for the following reasons.
Appellant’s argument that his second action should survive because his pendent state-law claim in the first action was dismissed “without prejudice” was adequately answered in the panel opinion at p. 1167. Appellant’s claim that the res judicata effect of that language was broader than the panel indicated overlooks that appellee, having won, could not appeal the “without prejudice” dismissal and thus could not be bound by that characterization to the extent urged by appellant. See In re Public Serv. Co.,898 F.2d 1 , 2 (1st Cir.1990) (“a party cannot appeal a judgment entered in its own favor”); Bath Iron Works Corp. v. Coulombe,888 F.2d 179 , 180 (1st Cir.1989) (similar); see also Sierra Club v. Marsh,907 F.2d 210 , 213 (1st Cir.1990) (“appellant, having prevailed, could not have appealed [the order]”).
Insofar as appellant urges, for the first time, new theories, variously characterized in his petition as “waiver,” “acquiescence” and “estoppel by judgment,” based on the fact that the defendant knew all along that the plaintiff could have asserted diversity jurisdiction, the contentions are not properly before us. The appellant did not make the contentions below. He did not make them in his appellate briefs. He did not make them at oral argument. • He did not request leave, after oral argument, to file a supplemental brief. The points are, therefore, foreclosed. “[A] party cannot be permitted to raise a new issue for the first time on a petition for rehearing in the court of appeals.” Anderson v. Beatrice Foods Co.,900 F.2d 388 , 397 (1st Cir.1990) (opinion denying rehearing).
The petition for panel rehearing is denied.
Notes
. The appellant did mention 28 U.S.C. § 1332 in a string citation in his original complaint.
See Kale v. Combined Ins. Co.,
. In the appeal, we also dealt with Coinco's request that the plaintiff be sanctioned.
See Kale I,
. It makes no theoretical difference that
Kale II
was removed to a federal venue. Had Coinco not removed the case, the result in the state superior court should be identical to the result reached here. After all,
Kale I
ended in a federal judgment and Massachusetts law provides for the application of federal
res judicata
principles when the "preclusive effect of a Federal court’s judgment" is at issue.
See Anderson v. Phoenix Inv. Counsel of Boston, Inc.,
. Even if the submission of counsel’s affidavit, containing copies of relevant
Kale I
materials, effectively converted the motion into a summary judgment motion,
see
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b), the standard of appellate review would remain the same.
See, e.g., Garside v. Osco Drug, Inc.,
. Shaver was decided well after Judge Skinner dismissed the state-law claim in Kale /.
. There was no issue preclusion applicable to the defense raised in Kale II. Since Judge Skinner was not made aware of the existence of diversity jurisdiction, his dismissal could only have been based on the special nature of pendent jurisdiction. Thus, the only preclusive effect the dismissal could have would be to forestall litigation of that particular issue, not the broader issue of whether jurisdiction could have been achieved in some other way. So, while Kale I finally determined that there was no pendent jurisdiction for the state-law claim, it did not in any way purport to determine that nonfederal claims could not otherwise have been brought within the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction.
